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Notes on Contributors

B. J. McMullin, Senior Lecturer in Librarianship at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia, is editor of the Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand Bulletin.

G. Thomas Tanselle, Vice-president of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, is one of the editors of the Northwestern-Newberry Edition of Melville.

Ross Atkinson holds one of three positions in the Northwestern University Library Scholar-Librarian Program which is being funded by a joint grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Council on Library Resources. His specialty is German literature.

Fredson Bowers is Linden Kent Professor of English Emeritus at the University of Virginia. He is currently occupied as Textual Editor of the multi-volumed ACLS edition of The Works of William James published by the Harvard University Press.

Martin C. Battestin is William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor of English at the University of Virginia. With his wife, Ruthe, who specializes in documentary research, he is preparing a biography of Fielding.

W. Speed Hill, who teaches at Lehman College and The Graduate Center of The City University of New York, is General Editor of the Folger Library Edition of the Works of Richard Hooker.

J. P. Vander Motten is Research and Teaching Assistant in the Department of English and American Literature at the State University of Ghent. His doctoral dissertation, Sir William Killigrew (1606-1695): His Life and Dramatic Works, has recently been published.

R. G. Moyles is a member of the Department of English, the University of Alberta, Canada.

John A. Wood teaches at McNeese State University, Louisiana. He is at present editing the Richardson-Bradshaigh correspondence. The holder of a doctorate from the University of Arkansas, he served as Academic Humanist for Women's Concerns for the State of Louisiana in 1977 and 1978.

S. Khrishnamoorthy Aithal, whose doctorate is from Indiana University, is Assistant Professor of English in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur. His primary research interest has been in the area of twentieth-century literature and


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criticism, and he has published articles on Conrad, Joyce, Forster, and Leavis in journals in India and abroad.

Bruce Steele is Associate Professor of English at Monash University, Victoria, Australia. Although his research until 1974 was chiefly in Old and Middle English, he is currently interested in the problems of editing modern authors, D. H. Lawrence in particular.

Judith G. Ruderman teaches literature to adults through Duke University's Office of Continuing Education and is a project coordinator for continuing education in the humanities. She has written on Lawrence for several journals.

David Leon Higdon is Professor of English at Texas Tech University where he edits Conradiana. His book Time and English Fiction has recently appeared from Macmillan, and his critical edition of Conrad's Almayer's Folly is due shortly from the Cambridge University Press. He is at present working on a new book, The Usable Past in Contemporary British Fiction.

Thomas Dilworth is Assistant Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Windsor, Ontario, Canada, and the author of the recently published The Liturgical Parenthesis of David Jones. He is currently working on a full-length study of Jones's poetry.

Louis Daniel Brodsky is a poet whose work has appeared in the American Scholar, the Literary Review, Texas Quarterly, Four Quarters, the Anthology of Magazine Verse for 1978, and Harper's Magazine. He is currently completing his ninth volume of poetry, Resume of a Scrapegoat.

Robert W. Hamblin is Professor of English at Southeast Missouri State University and the author of various essays on Faulkner, who was the subject of his doctorate at the University of Mississippi. He is associate editor of The Cape Rock, a little magazine of poetry.

Arthur D. Casciato is a doctoral candidate in English at the University of Virginia.